Food delivery group Deliveroo has narrowed the price range on its initial public offering, ensuring its order books were fully covered for what will be London’s biggest IPO in a decade.
The London-based company, founded by boss William Shu in 2013, could be valued at up to 7.85 billion pounds ($10.85 billion) in its stock market debut on March 31.
The listing is set to be London’s biggest IPO since Glencore in May 2011 and also the biggest tech float on the London Stock Exchange, dwarfing The Hut Group last year.
Deliveroo narrowed its price range on Monday to between 3.90 and 4.10 pounds per share, indicating a valuation of between 7.6 billion pounds and 7.85 billion pounds, excluding shares offered as part of an over-allotment issue.
The company opted against pricing the deal at the top of an original price range of between 3.90 and 4.60 pounds – which would have given it a market value of up to 8.8 billion pounds – citing market volatility.
Banks working on the deal said on Monday that order books were covered throughout the price range, showing demand would “exceed the full deal size.”
“Deliveroo has received very significant demand from institutions across the globe. The deal is covered multiple times throughout the range, led by three highly respected anchor investors,” a company spokesperson confirmed.